Remington Musser had suffered from attacks that left him fighting for breath for years. His parents said they went to several doctors and were told everything from allergies to walking pneumonia. At times, he was taking five medications and still not getting better.

Dr. Julie Wei, a pediatric otolaryngologist at the University of Kansas Hospital, had some advice that changed everything.

"It's not that he has some health issue. It's nothing he was born with. This is something that can be cured. This is something I can cure," Wei said.

The solution sounded almost too simple.

"The key, specifically in his case and many other children, is right away, I tell them to stop any bedtime meal," Wei said.

She calls it the milk-and-cookies disease. Remington's parents said his bedtime routine was to take a bath, have chocolate milk and then go to bed.

Wei said dairy and sugar don't digest overnight, causing a number of health problems.

She said about 75 percent of the young patients she sees share a common trend.

"When I ask them about their dietary habits, I find a positive history of eating and drinking before bed, or consuming excessive dairy and consuming excessive sugar," Wei said.

After Remington's parents cut out dairy and sugar in the evening hours, they said they noticed an astonishing change just three to four days. He now doesn't have to take any of the medications that he was on before.

Anyone interested to learn more about Wei's treatment and the milk-and-cookies disease can visit her website.

The Obama administration will unveil a major climate change plan Monday aimed at a large reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from the nation's coal-burning power plants, a senior administration official told CNN.